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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Melissa Glazer Fires Up Another Enjoyable Cozy!
If possible, I'd give the second Clay and Crime Mystery, The Cracked Pot, four-and-a-half stars. Melissa Glazer, a.k.a. Tim Myers, uses this newest installment to better define the main characters and flesh out their personalities. Carolyn Emerson is as cranky as ever in this arts and crafts cozy, but the reader gets a much better look at her softer side as she looks...
Published on May 18, 2008 by C. A. Hopkins

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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too Grouchy For Me
I really want to love this series but Carolyn is just so unlikeable I find it hard to read. I'm all for cranky, but she takes it to an all new level with her sarcasm and snapping and it's just constant. It's mentioned in the book that her two sons rarely call except on birthdays and holidays...no wonder. The way she acts so utterly entitled to snoop around and meddle...
Published on August 28, 2008 by Chris


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11 of 12 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Melissa Glazer Fires Up Another Enjoyable Cozy!, May 18, 2008
By 
C. A. Hopkins (The gorgeous Rockies) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)    (REAL NAME)   
If possible, I'd give the second Clay and Crime Mystery, The Cracked Pot, four-and-a-half stars. Melissa Glazer, a.k.a. Tim Myers, uses this newest installment to better define the main characters and flesh out their personalities. Carolyn Emerson is as cranky as ever in this arts and crafts cozy, but the reader gets a much better look at her softer side as she looks after her better half, Bill, and also tries to protect her best-friend's son on several different fronts. While she is certainly abrasive, Carolyn also has several endearing qualities, not the least of which is her strong sense of right and wrong. She knows full well what it's like to be wrongfully accused and will take whatever measures necessary to see that mistakes are made right. Now that she doesn't suspect the sheriff of foul play, their relationship, while still strained, is one of grudging mutual respect and is much more believable.

This particular mystery revolves around a renowned potter who disappears on his way to Carolyn's pottery shop, Fire at Will. As it turns out, this isn't the first time this particular individual has disappeared from Maple Ridge. Carolyn and her assistant, David, are ill prepared for what happens next. After a dead body is discovered, Carolyn finds out where more than a few of the townsfolk's skeletons are buried - and she is inundated with advice to let sleeping dogs lie. With her contrary nature, however, such advice only serves to strengthen her resolve to solve the mystery - which she does, with a lot of help from her friends.

All in all, this is an enjoyable cozy with an interesting group of main characters that I'm sure we'll learn more about as the series progresses. The clay tips at the end are a welcome bonus. I'll definitely be on the lookout for the next book in this series!

I do have one small complaint - which actually has nothing to do with the author. I dislike all typos, but a typo on the back cover is an egregious mistake. I hope it's fixed prior to further printing.

Carol Ann Hopkins 5/18/2008
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
2.0 out of 5 stars Too Grouchy For Me, August 28, 2008
By 
Chris (New York, NY) - See all my reviews
I really want to love this series but Carolyn is just so unlikeable I find it hard to read. I'm all for cranky, but she takes it to an all new level with her sarcasm and snapping and it's just constant. It's mentioned in the book that her two sons rarely call except on birthdays and holidays...no wonder. The way she acts so utterly entitled to snoop around and meddle in the lives of everyone around here just adds to my irritation. The plot is really good, there are some twists and turns that are wonderfully suprising and the resolution was rivoting. I had no idea that Tim Myers was actually the author and I have adored all of his other series so maybe this is one that just isn't for me.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars Loved it!, June 8, 2008
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This is definitely one of my favorite cozy series! Somehow Carolyn has found herself in the middle of another murder investigation. This time it's someone that she knows, but that no one is happy to see. Carolyn is very lucky to have such a great group of friend in the "Firing Squad". Friends that have no trouble snooping to help her solve the murder. And poor Bill continues to worry about Carolyn and the trouble she seems to find. Ms. Glazer makes her characters friends you'd like to have as your own. I'm looking forward to the next book in the series - A Fatal Slip.
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4 of 6 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The night is dark and the stars shine down. Someone has committed new crime in town, September 18, 2008
I found myself back in charming Maple Ridge faster than expected, the second book in the Clay and Crime series was even more fun than the first. Carolyn Emerson and her zany gang of pottery fanatics have enchanted me enough to be anticipating the 3rd book in the series out in November, but if that book was in my lap today I would probably be cracking it open in no time.

After meeting most of the original characters from the first book, minus the killer that was unveiled in it, I got right back into Carolyn's life, full of ups and downs as usual. Trying to stay in business with finicky customers, surprise visits from people from her past and finding yet another body, Carolyn has her hands fuller than before. Not only she feels obligated to solve another gristly death but two of her friends, David and Hannah are somehow connected and she has to decide whether to stand by them or forget all loyalties and solve the crime without emotional attachment.

Summer approaching the small Vermont town brings in some new faces into the neighborhood and catches up nicely to the ones I missed and met before and as usual has plenty of fun pottery woven into the story. Carolyn and her husband Bill are as sweet as every, and even though the bicker I enjoy their tight camaraderie and all the food everyone is always eating in this book. This was a very fast read, can probably be swallowed up in one day. Also I have to agree with the review below mine that Carolyn was meddling into everyone life and checking out their alibis but at least they told her off properly and created little drama, it was entertaining, so it didn't discourage me from enjoying this book. Most cozy mysteries have a heroine that does more work and snooping than all the cops in the book, otherwise it would not be a cozy mystery but a dry crime novel.

- Kasia S.
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2 of 3 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars The Firing Squad solves another case, June 11, 2008
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The Firing Squad is at it again. This is another wacky murder mystery featuring the gang at Fire at Will. A good read for those who enjoy humor with their mystery.
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1.0 out of 5 stars Annoying Characters, August 25, 2011
By 
LH422 (Washington, USA) - See all my reviews
(VINE VOICE)   
This book features one of the most annoying protagonists I've encountered. Carolyn Emerson owns a pottery shop in a Vermont tourist town. When a dead body turns up in her backyard, the prime suspect is Carolyn's associate, who also happens to be her best friend's son. Convinced that the police are incompetent, Carolyn undertakes the task of solving the mystery.

The problem with all of this is that Carolyn is annoying. REALLY annoying. Her favorite activity is complaining. Carolyn complains about her husband, her customers, the local sheriff, among others. She's downright rude to the sheriff because she thinks he's incompetent (though there's no evidence of that in the book).

Then there's Carolyn's troupe of followers, "the firing squad," a group so devoted to pottery that they're willing to go all out to solve a dangerous mystery. They still take pottery breaks, though. Each of the members of the firing squad is a sort of stereotype, especially the ex-con with the heart of porcelain, and the tough, no-nonsense lady judge.

Honestly, life is too short for books like this. There are more entertaining ways to spend one's time.
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5.0 out of 5 stars Great read., January 6, 2011
This is a great book to just sit down and read through. The characters were easy to identify with people I have actually met during my life and I appreciate the sarcastic personality of Carolyn. This was my first book I read in the series and will certainly look for the others.
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3.0 out of 5 stars One thing about this book drives me crazy!, January 12, 2010
By 
Jacquelyn Bailey (Ft. Washington, MD) - See all my reviews
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The plot is fine, the characters are well-drawn, but one technical detail drives me crazy. Several times during the book, Carolyn puts just-made, still-wet pottery into her kiln to fire. Now, I'm no potter, but even I know that that is a big no-no. Pottery has to dry before it is fired, otherwise it will explode in the kiln. If Ms. Glazer had said, even once, that her kiln had a feature to allow the pots to dry rapidly before the full firing, I would have let it pass, but she doesn't mention it, and it annoys me.
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3.0 out of 5 stars A so-so book - not really awful but not really great, November 12, 2008
I belive this series has potential, as the actual mystery itself was intriging enough, but the author needs to work on improving the dialogue between characters and creating the right "ambience" so that we feel and respond to the situation in the same way as the main character. Also thought that the main character was more "rude" than "cranky" and I felt that she treated her husband somewhat disrespectfully.
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4.0 out of 5 stars The Cracked Pot, November 1, 2008
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B. A. Elsner (Whiite Salmon, WA, USA) - See all my reviews
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Good story and characters. Some humor. Plot moves right along. I look forward to book 3.
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The Cracked Pot
The Cracked Pot by Melissa Glazer (Hardcover - 2008)
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